However - the system tray is not an Application Launch Bar and right clicking on the Opera icon (or any other icon in the system tray) only produces credentials relaying to this particular program. There certainly is no option to change an icon. In any Application Launch Bar the icon used is the one from opera.desktop, as one would like to expect. The system tray, however, appears to follow different routes as far as icon allocation is concerned.

Just to clarify: The system tray (for me) is the part of the panel where icons show of some programs which are active in some or other way. The network icon would be one of them, dropbox icon another one - and the offensive Opera icon.

longtom wrote:...Just to clarify: The system tray (for me) is the part of the panel where icons show of some programs which are active in some or other way. The network icon would be one of them, dropbox icon another one - and the offensive Opera icon.

To be really clear... System tray is a Windows term.

Microsoft Windows assumes I am not smart.Linux demands that I prove it.

longtom wrote:...Just to clarify: The system tray (for me) is the part of the panel where icons show of some programs which are active in some or other way. The network icon would be one of them, dropbox icon another one - and the offensive Opera icon.

To be really clear... System tray is a Windows term.

I see. So googling "system tray linux" will not bring up anything? Try it....

Apart from that - do you have anything to offer as far as a solution to the issue is concerned? That would be highly appreciated.

I'll come back to my original recommendation now that we have digressed through all of the niceties of what constitutes a system tray... .

With a variation from my original suggestion, locate the specific app icon that is used in the "system tray" when the app is running. Modifying it's appearance through a image editing program. Of course, you will be faced with the labor or locating the .png file for the icon and editing and replacing it (root priv's).

DataMan wrote:I'll come back to my original recommendation now that we have digressed through all of the niceties of what constitutes a system tray... .

Ohoh - you said the word .....

With a variation from my original suggestion, locate the specific app icon that is used in the "system tray" when the app is running. Modifying it's appearance through a image editing program. Of course, you will be faced with the labor or locating the .png file for the icon and editing and replacing it (root priv's).

-DataMan

Yes - I follow your train of thought. I, surprisingly enough, arrived at the same point. However - I failed to locate the icons or the directory where they might be possibly located. I went through quite a few including lots of in /usr/share as well as ~/.opera/icons . Of course I didn't do them all - that would take some time I reckon.

So I was wondering if somebody could give a hint what would be the most likely places to search apart from: